Glossary
This glossary is written for health care professionals. As a result, some of the terms and phraseology used might seem confusing to those not familiar with brain injury management. If you have a question about any of the terms or definitions listed below, please consult your health care provider.
ABI
Acquired Brain Injury; an injury to
the brain that has occurred since birth. An ABI can be caused by direct
neurological insult or indirectly via metabolic/systemic illness.
ACCELERATION
The sudden movement of the brain
inside the skull during an impact which causes the tearing of neurons and
connections deep inside the brain
ACTIVITY REINFORCER
A type of secondary
reinforcer which includes activity
consequences such as bowling, a card game or walking
AGNOSIA
Partial or complete inability to
recognize sensory stimuli; perception without meaning
AMNESIA
A loss of memory
- Anterograde
Inability to remember events subsequent to traumatic brain injury
- Post-traumatic (PTA)
Period of time following an accident when you have no memory. This period includes the coma at any time after awakening that you cannot remember anything. The length of the PTA is a partial predictor of the quality of the recovery.
- Retrograde
Inability to remember events that occurred prior to the onset of amnesia
ANGULAR GYRUS
A convolution in the parietal lobe, important language functions and intersensory processing
ANOMIA
Difficulty in finding words, especially in naming objects
ANOSOGNOSIA
A diminished self-awareness of problems, resulting from information processing difficulties
ANOXIA
An abnormal condition characterized by a relative or total lack of oxygen
ANTECEDENT
A stimulus or event which precedes a behavior
ANEURYSM
Circumscribed dilation of an artery formed by a stretching of its walls; suggestive of a condition in which the weakened blood vessel may burst
APHASIA
Inability to comprehend and/or use language skills
- Global
- Expressive
- Receptive
APRAXIA
Impairment in the ability to perform purposeful acts or to manipulate objects without paralysis/paresis; can affect oral, verbal and upper/lower extremity functioning
AROUSAL
The ability to stay awake; one part of the attention stage of information processing. An early problem with many survivors is a constant feeling of drowsiness, sleepiness or inability to remain alert. This often improves with time.
ATAXIA
A disturbance in the coordination of the muscular movements
ATTENTION
- Focused Attention
The ability to demonstrate a discrete response to stimuli
- Sustained Attention
The ability to maintain a behavioral response for a continuous or repetitive activity
- Selective Attention
The ability to maintain a behavioral response which requires activation or inhibition of the response depending upon discrimination of stimuli
- Alternating Attention
The ability to perform tasks that require rapid switching from one response set to another
- Divided AttentionThe ability to respond to two simultaneous selective attention tasks
AUGMENTATIVE & ALTERNATIVE COMMUNICATION
Use of forms of communication other than speaking, such as sign language, "yes/no" signals, gestures, pictureboard and computerized speech systems to compensate either temporarily or permanently for severe expressive communication disorder
AWARENESS/INSIGHT
- Intellectual Awareness (IA)
The ability to understand at some
level that a function is impaired (low level awareness) or to understand the
implications of that impairment (high level awareness). Lack of knowledge may be
the basis of intellectual unawareness. On the other hand, brain damage itself
may be responsible through impaired abstract reasoning and severe memory
problems.
- Emergent Awareness (EA)
The ability to recognize a problem when
it's happening (this requires that a person first have intellectual awareness).
The person may have difficulty monitoring the relationship between their actions
and their environment and may have to trust the feedback of others ("Did I
really forget to close the cash register drawer?"). To make matters worse, the
person may not trust others. They may be able to define their deficit, state why
a particular comp. system is needed but can't apply it because they don't
realize the problem is occurring.
- Anticipatory Awareness (AA)
The ability to anticipate that a
problem will occur as a result of having some type of deficit. To anticipate a
problem, a person must have both intellectual awareness (i.e., awareness they
have a problem) and emergent awareness (i.e., a recognition when problems are
actually occurring). The person with problems in this area is unable to realize
in advance of their actions (i.e., anticipate) that a given problem will cause a
particular problem in the future. Anticipation is one of the important executive functions of the brain.
Problems in AA can frustrate loved ones because the person is able tell them
about their problem (i.e., intellectual awareness) and can also tell them when
they're having a problem (i.e., emergent awareness), but are unable to
anticipate problems before they occur. As a result, loved ones often think,
"They should have known that was going to happen!"
Isolated deficits in AA are typically rarer than those in IA and EA because
the frontal lobe lesions that cause difficulty in anticipation are frequently
associated with lesions that reduce abstract reasoning, which in turn lead to
deficits in IA. Intact IA is a prerequisite for AA to occur.
BACK-UP REINFORCER
A
reinforcer for
which tokens are traded
BASAL GANGLIA
Paired
subcortical structures that are parts of the extrapyramidal motor system
involved in maintaining motor tone and involuntary motor activity. These
structures are interconnected with the frontal lobes and when damaged can lead
to problems in various domains of executive functions
BEHAVIOR
Any action or response made by an
individual. Behavior may be overt or covert. Overt behavior is observable and
includes verbal behavior. Covert behavior is not observable; thoughts and
feelings are covert behavior. Behavior is also classified as being either
respondent or operant.
BILATERAL
Occurring on or applying to both
sides of the body
BLUNT IMPACT
The cause of closed head injuries,
from a collision between the skull and a blunt object. There is no penetration
of the skull, but the skull is often bent inward from the blow.
BRAIN
A large, soft structure of nerve tissue,
blood and cerebrospinal fluid contained within the skull. The brain, together
with the spinal cord, makes up the central nervous system.
BRAIN STEM
Lower end of brain; the midbrain,
pons and medulla; controls all automatic body functions, such as breathing,
blood circulation, heartbeat, swallowing and level of consciousness. It also
plays a role in governing movement.
BRAIN STEM EVOKED RESPONSE
A response provoked
by stimulating the brain stem; may be auditory, visual, and/or somatosensory. A
machine is used to test whether the brain stem has received the signals.
BRAIN SWELLING
A significant increase in the
size of the brain due to an increase in the amount of blood going there; may
occur after severe head injury
CAREGIVERS CONFERENCE
A PRN meeting to do more
focused treatment planning and problem solving for individuals with acquired
brain injury. Anyone on the treatment team can call for a caregiver conference.
Sometimes problems and issues exist in only one therapy. However, that
particular problem is not just that therapist's issue; it is a team issue which
must be addressed accordingly.
CEREBELLUM
a portion of the
brain that occupies a position in posterior (i.e. back) of the brainstem. It has
a left and right hemisphere as well as median lobe called the vermis. It
regulates motor coordination and has been implicated in cognitive functions such
as complex attention and procedural learning.
CEREBROSPINAL FLUID (CSF)
A water cushion
protecting the brain and spinal cord from shock
CEREBRUM
The largest part of the brain;
controls voluntary or willed movement and the ability to create rational
thought. Such capabilities are only possessed by human beings. The cerebrum is
made up of frontal, temporal, parietal and occipital lobes divided into halves.
CLINICAL PATHWAY
An interdisciplinary tool that
maps expected outcomes and associated interventions along a timeline, for
patients with specific diagnoses or procedures
CLOSED HEAD INJURY
Traumatic
head injury in which the skull is not broken and the
dura is not pierced
COGNITION
The mental process
or faculty of knowing; may be simple or complex, and includes psychological
(past/present) cognitive and physiological medical/neurological factors
COGNITIVE RETRAINING REHAB
Therapeutic
intervention aimed at facilitating the recovery of mental skills disrupted as a
result of brain injury
COMA
Long periods of unconsciousness. The depth
may vary from no response to stimulation to a slight awakening. Depth and length
often affect the quality of recovery.
CONCEPT
Embracing all of the various models:
perceiving, remembering, imagining, conceiving, judging, reasoning, visual
spatial and problem solving
CONCUSSION
A mild form of head injury producing
a temporary loss of consciousness, fatigue, headaches and brief memory loss
CONFABULATION
The fabrication of experiences
recounted to fill in and cover up gaps in memory
CONFRONTATION NAMING
Ability to name objects
when asked versus in the context of speech
CONSEQUENCE
A stimulus or event which follows a
behavior
CONTINGENCY
A relationship between a behavior
and consequence. "Eric can play catch (consequence) after he cleans his room
(behavior)" is a statement of contingency.
COUP-CONTRECOUP
When the brain is hit with
sufficient force, it will "bounce" against the opposite side of the skull
causing injury to both the site of impact (coup) and the part of the brain
opposite the impact (contrecoup).
CONTRALATERAL
Pertaining to the side of the
body opposite the reference point
CONTROLLING VARIABLE
An environmental variable
which can affect a behavior
CONTUSION
A form of injury involving bruising
of the tissue
CORPUS CALLOSUM
The band of commissural fibers
which connects the two hemispheres of the brain and allows for rapid and
effective interhemisphere communication
CORTEX
The outer convoluted surface of the
brain that is composed of nerve cell bodies and their synaptic connections. It
is the highest and most complexly organized center of the brain. The cortex is
typically divided into four main lobes: frontal, temporal, parietal and
occipital.
CORTICAL DYSPLASIA
An
abnormality in the growth, size and/or shape of cells.
CRANIAL NERVES
12 pairs of nerves which have
their origin in the brain stem. Each performs the following functions:
| OLFACTORY
|
Smell
|
|
FACIAL
|
Face Movement
|
| OPTIC
|
Vision
|
|
AUDITORY
|
Hearing
|
| OCULOMOTOR
|
Pupils'
Reaction to Light |
|
VESTIBULOCOCHLEAR |
Hearing &
Balance |
| TROCHLEAR
|
Eye Movement
|
|
VAGUS
|
Involuntary
Muscles |
| TRIGEMINAL
|
Facial; Chew
Sensation |
|
SPINAL
ACCESSARY |
Voluntary
muscles of neck |
| ABDUCENS
|
Eye Movement
|
|
HYPOGLOSSAL
|
Tongue Movement
|
CRANIUM
The bones of the skull
CT SCAN
Computed tomography; an x-ray
procedure that provides a three dimensional reconstruction of the brain
architecture using a computer. By varying the angles of the x-ray beam, numerous
"slices" of brain tissue can be visualized and distinguished according to the
densities of their components.
DECELERATION
The sudden stop of the brain's
forward motion when it hits the skull after an impact. This sudden stop tears
the neuron connections and violently twists and jars the brain.
DEPENDENCY
A causal relationship between a
behavior and a consequence. For example: Tom will receive a paycheck
(consequence) ONLY if he works 30 hours this week (behavior).
DEPRESSED SKULL FX
Pressure against the brain
from broken bones
DEPRIVATION
When the probability of a behavior
is increased only because the individual has not come into contact with the
positive consequence of that behavior for a sufficiently long period of time
DIFFUSE BRAIN
INJURY
Widespread injury resulting from the brain forcefully hitting
the inside of the skull bones in addition to being twisted
DIMINISHED BEHAVIORS
A class of behavior
characterized by withdrawal, refusal to answer questions or talk and answering
in monosyllables
DURA MATER
A tough, leathery membrane that
encases the brain and provides the brain's last defense against intrusion
DIPLEGIA
bilateral paralysis
of extremities (e.g. both arms, both legs)
DIPLOPIA
Double vision; perceiving two images
from a single object
DISINHIBITION
The inability to control or
inhibit impulses and emotions
DISORIENTATION
Not knowing where or who you are
and/or the time; often referred to as "disoriented in all three spheres" or
"disoriented times three," referring to person, place and time
DISTRIBUTED PARALLEL PROCESSING
A contemporary
concept used to describe cognitive processing that is both parallel and
distributed. Most cognitive tasks require the simultaneous consideration of many
items of information. "Distributed" refers to the idea that complex
behavioral/cognitive domains are mapped at the level of multifocal networks
distributed throughout the brain. There are both local and large-scale networks,
and processing occurs at many different levels (i.e., parallel), including the
sensory, cognitive/cordical and metacognitive levels.
DORSAL
Toward the back
DURA
The outer layer of membranes enclosing the
brain and spinal cord
Difficulty in
speech production caused by a lack of coordination of speech apparatus and a
lack of strength, ROM and coordination
DYSCALCULIA
An impairment in the ability to
perform mathematical operations
DYSGRAPHIA
An impairment in the ability to
write
DYSLEXIA
An impairment in the ability to read
DYSPHAGIA
An impairment in the ability to
swallow, which may result from a brain injury
DYSPLASIA
Abnormal tissue development
DYSPRAXIA
A partial loss of the ability to
perform skilled, coordinated movements without paralysis or paresis; can affect
oral, verbal and upper extremity/lower extremity functioning.
DYSTONIA
slow,
involuntary, dysrrhythmic muscle contractions. This often results in distorted
body posture
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY (EEG)
The
method studying electrical brain waves with electrodes attached to the scalp or
inserted into the brain ("depth electrodes"). The EEG is used to help diagnosis
epilepsy, encephalitis, toxic and metabolic conditions. It is also used to
evaluate coma and brain death.
ELICIT
Causing a response to occur by
presenting a particular antecedent
EMBOLISM
The sudden blocking of an artery or
vein by a blood clot, bubble of air, deposit of oil or fat or small mass of
cells deposited by the blood current
ENCEPHALITIS
Inflammation of the brain
EPIDURAL HEMORRHAGE
Bleeding between the skull
and
dura
EPILEPSY
A group of neurological disorders
characterized by recurrent episodes of convulsive seizures, abnormal behavior,
loss of consciousness, sensory disturbances, etc. An uncontrolled electrical
discharge from the nerve cells of the cerebral cortex is common to all forms of
epilepsy. A status epilepticus is a continual attack of convulsive seizures
which occur without intervals of consciousness. Irreversible brain damage may
result if seizures go unarrested. Status epilepticus is a medical emergency.
EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS:
- Goal Selection
The ability to generate or choose, as defined by
appropriate future objectives; requires anticipation (Sohlberg & Mateer) and
a sense of intention
- Planning/Sequencing
The ability to develop a scheme to reach
intended objectives; includes the ability to correctly order the steps involved
in generating a plan and encompasses organizational skills
- Initiation
The ability to behaviorally begin an action
- Execution
The ability to carry out or follow through with intended
actions; the behavioral correlate to planning. Execution comprises the skills
involved in carrying out planning/organizational schemes.
- Time Sense
The ability to estimate the passage of time and monitor
one's performance within time constraints; a specific application of planning
and execution. The rationale for distinguishing time sense as a separate scale
was based on the high frequency with which problems in time management were
reported as a primary obstacle to community reentry. As such, time management
was often an important treatment objective.
- Awareness of Deficits
An individual's level of awareness and
understanding of existing impairments after injury, including knowledge of how
impairments will impact daily functioning and acceptance of the need to
compensate for and accommodate deficits
- Self-Monitoring
The ability to self-evaluate and modify one's own
behavior in response to information gleaned from the environment, including the
ability to detect and correct one's own errors
EXTERNAL MEMORY
Device aid used to give feedback and
assist an individual with recall of information/events, things to do, steps in
an activity, problem solving and self-monitoring. Examples would include a
string on the finger, programmable watch, spell checker, memory log or notebook
organizer.
EXTRAPYRAMIDAL SIDE
EFFECTS
"
Extrapyramidal" refers to motor control that
originates in the basal ganglia and does not involve the pyramidal tracts. The
term "Extrapyramidal Side Effects" is typically used to describe the side
effects that affect the extrapyramidal system. Typical symptoms of an
extrapyramidal disorder from medications include Brady Kinesia (slowness of
movement), heightened muscle tone, pronounced rigidity and slow and shuffling
gait. Some classes of neuroleptics (g. Haldol and Mellaril) can produce these
side effects.
EXTINCTION
A process whereby a behavior
eventually stops occurring because the positive consequence normally maintaining
the behavior is eliminated
FEEDBACK
Information given by another person
regarding behavior. Such information can be used constructively to improve
behavior.
FIM SCALE
The
Functional Independence
Measurement Scale is a tool used for program evaluation. It measures how
patients are doing when they are admitted to the Rehab Unit, again at discharge
and 90 days following discharge. Data is collected on 18 items in the areas of
self care, sphincter control, mobility, communication and social cognition.
FIXED REIMFORCEMENT SCHEDULE
A schedule whereby
reinforcement occurs on a regular or consistent basis, such as after every five
responses (fixed-ratio 5) or after the first response that occurs after 10
minutes have elapsed since the last reinforcement (fixed interval 10 minutes)
FLACCID
Loss of muscle tone; body part appears
limp
FOCAL DEFICITS
Hematomas and lesions on the
surface or interior of the brain located at the site of impact or at isolated
points in the brain. Not as random as diffuse consequences, these problem areas
of the brain can be pinpointed and many problems attributed to them.
FRONTAL LOBE DYSFUNCTION
Behavioral symptoms
resulting from damage to the frontal lobes of the brain, causing diminution in
self-control, foresight and/or spontaneity
GLASGOW COMA SCALE (GCS)
A quick, practical and
standardized system for assessing the degree of conscious impairment and
predicting outcome following levels 1-15 traumatic brain injuries
GLASGOW OUTCOME SCALE (GOS)
A reliable scale
for categorizing the outcomes of brain-injured survivors on the basis of overall
social capability (or dependence). The four possible categories of survival are
Vegetative state (VS),
Moderate Disability (MD),
Severe
Disability (SD) and
Good Recovery (GR).
HEMATOMA
A mass of blood caused by bleeding in
a confined space
HEMIANOPSIA
A loss of half the visual field
HEMIPARESIS
Muscular weakness affecting one
side of the body
HEMISPHERES
The two halves into which the
cerebrum is divided down the middle
HEMIPLEGIA
Paralysis of
one side of the body
HEMORRHAGE
Loss of a large quantity of blood in
a short period of time
HIPPOCAMPUS
paired
structures in the medial (i.e. middle) part of each temporal lobe. Part of the
limbic system and heavily involved in the new learning of verbal and visual
information. Often is the focus of seizure activity in complex partial seizures
HYDROCEPHALUS
An increased amount of
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) within the spaces
of the brain
HYPOTHALAMUS
Part of the brain which regulates
automatic body functions, such as thirst, appetite, body temperature and sex
drive
HYPOXIA
An inadequate, reduced tension of
arterial oxygen which results in increased heart and respiratory rates.
Breathing failure and coma can ensue in severe cases. Treatment may include
oxygen therapy, mechanical ventilation, frequent analysis of blood gasses or
respiratory stimulant drugs.
INFORMATION PROCESSING
The primary purpose of
the brain. Among its duties, the brain handles information, examines incoming
information from the senses, pays attention to what is important, makes
decisions and initiates response. This cycle applies to information from the
environment and the body. Any break in the cycle can have profound consequences.
INITIATION
The ability to start or begin things
INPUT
The first stage of information
processing. Information travels through the senses to the brain from the
environment and internal organs of the body.
INTRACRANIAL PRESSURE (ICP)
The exertion of
force within the brain by intracellular fluids capable of causing distortion or
displacement of cerebral structures or a reduction of cerebral blood flow.
Because the skull is a rigid container of brain tissue, blood and
cerebrospinal fluid , an increased volume of
one component without an equal decrease of another will result in ICP.
INTERMITTENT SCHEDULE OF REINFORCEMENT
A
schedule or reinforcement whereby some occurrences are not reinforced. The four
major intermittent schedules are
Fixed-Ratio (FR),
Variable-Ratio
(VR),
Fixed-Interval (FI) and
Variable-Interval (VI).
INTRACEREBRAL HEMATOMA
Bleeding within brain
tissue
JUDGEMENT
See
Awareness .
LACERATION
A cut or tear of tissue
LESION
Any visible local abnormality of the
tissues of the body or nervous system.
LOBES
The four sections into which the cerebrum
is divided. While each has its own particular activities, it is important to
remember that all the lobes interact with each other.
- Frontal
The forward portion of cerebrum; primary functions center
around planning, organization, problem solving and self awareness
- Parietal
Complex lobe of the cerebrum; serves many functions; puts
together verbal/visual information to make reading possible and plays a role in
tactile sensation
- Temporal
The archral lobe plays a major role in language, as well
as in coding information to memory. Though actual storage of info occurs
throughout the brain, coding occurs in the temporal lobe.
- Occipital
Located on the backside of the cerebrum, this portion of
the brain is primarily centered around vision. Information from the eyes is
processed here.
MAGNETIC
RESONANCE IMAGING (MRI)
A diagnostic technique that uses non-ionizing
energy to produce sectional images of the human body. A strong magnetic field is
used in conjunction with a radio frequency oscillating magnetic field to
stimulate signals from atoms in living tissue. These signals are reconstructed
by a computer into sectional images in any plane.
MEDULLA
Part of the hindbrain, the medulla
controls automatic body activities. For example, your heart rate, breathing rate
and blood pressure would be very hard to control if you had to do it
consciously.
MEMORY
- Procedural
The ability to learn rule-based or automatic behavioral
sequences, such as motor skills, conditioned responses, certain kinds of
rule-based puzzles and perceptual motor tasks, and to carry out sequences for
running/operating things (e.g., riding a bike; using a VCR, computer or
microwave oven; playing tennis; etc.)
- Declarative
A type of memory that implies conscious awareness and
the ability to report something (e.g., the ability to recall a conversation with
someone last week or to remember information from a book). If someone were to
ask about that conversation or the information in the book, you would use your
declarative memory system to recall it.
- Prospective
The ability to remember what needs to be done (e.g.,
remembering an upcoming appointment). The ability to "remember into the future"
places heavy demands on the executive control and "working memory" systems of
the brain.
- Retrograde
Memory of events prior to insult or injury. In clinical
practice, we often refer to "retrograde amnesia" as loss of memory for a period
of time before an acquired brain injury.
- Short Term
Information you only need to remember for a short time
(e.g., a phone number from an operator)
- Long Term/Remote
The ability to learn and remember new things over
a long period of time; involves association with previous information or
experiences
MENINGES
Three-layered
membranes enclosing the brain and spinal cord; composed of the
dura
(outer layer),
arachnoid (middle layer) and
pia (inner layer)
MIDBRAIN
The first major division of the brain.
Primary activities center around wakefulness and alertness. People with injury
here are often drowsy and hard to arouse.
MOTOR PLANNING
The ability to organize
voluntary movements
MYOCLONUS
Can be seen in a
variety of normal (e.g. early stages of sleep) or abnormal situations (e.g.
epilepsy)
NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCE
A stimulus or event which
decreases the probability of the behavior it follows
NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
A branch of psychology that
attempts to test different specific components of cognition by examining
cognitive elements such as memory, visuoperceptual function and reaction time.
The neuropsychologist is interested in determining the site and mechanism of
damage to specific functions.
NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL
EVALUATION:
a comprehensive assessment of cognitive, motor and
behavioral functions utilizing a set of standard tests and procedures. Various
brain related functions are evaluated including: intelligence, memory, new
learning ability, attention, language, planning, organization, problem solving
& reasoning abilities, perceptual and motor abilities as well as various
tests of behavior, personality and emotional function. A neuropsychological
evaluation is utilized for assessing progress after a brain injury, identifying
the consequences of neurological illness (e.g. epilepsy, tumor, anoxia, TBI) and
assisting in developing educational and/or vocational plan.
NUCHAL RIGIDITY
Stiffness and pain in the neck
upon movement
OPERANT
Behavior which is caused mainly by its
past consequence rather than simply by its
antecedents (e.g., mailing letters to
friends because letters have been received in return in the past) (See
Respondent .)
OPTIC CHIASM
The point at which the optic nerve
from one eye crosses to join the other
ORIENTATION
Identifying person, place, time and
situation
OUTPUT
The final stage of information
processing, usually consisting of behaviors and/or feelings
PARALYSIS
Neurologic muscular weakness or
dysfunction to the point of immobility. With lack of movement, muscles begin to
contract and become smaller or atrophic. Paralysis of the extremities on one
side of the body is called
hemiplegia. Paralysis of all four extremities
is called
quadriplegia.
PATH FINDING SKILLS
The ability to utilize
executive functions to safely travel from
one destination to another at various levels of difficulty
PENETRATING INJURIES
Injuries
which occur when the skull becomes broken and an object such as a skull fragment
or bullet penetrates the dura mater and brain tissue
PERINATAL
Occurring during
the period shortly before or after birth.
PERSEVERATION
The
tendency to continue an activity, motor or mental, once it has been started and
to be unable to modify or stop the activity even though it is acknowledged to
have become inappropriate. In speech, automatic and often involuntary repetition
of words
PLANNING
Two varieties: deciding what
activities and things must be done, and deciding how to respond or behave to a
given situation
PONS
The part of the hindbrain that acts as the
information link between the forebrain and cerebellum
POSITIVE CONSEQUENCE
A stimulus or event which
increases the probability of the behavior it follows
POST TRAUMATIC EPILEPSY
A type of seizure
disorder occurring in greater than 5 percent of patients who suffer head trauma.
The more severe the injury the greater the likelihood that seizures will appear.
Seizures may consist of motor or sensory activity, emotional states or a
combination.
PREMORBID
Prior to the onset of illness or
injury
PROBLEM SOLVING
Considered to be one of the
"higher" functions of the cerebrum, problem solving involves gathering
information from different sources, assimilating it, generating a solution,
trying the solution out and changing it if necessary.
PROCESSING
The third stage of information
processing. Components include
association,
memory,
problem
solving,
organization and
planning.
PROMPT/CUE
A specific
antecedent which generates a particular
behavior
PROSODY
Stress,
intonation, intensity and duration of voice that signals linguistic qualities;
melody of speech caused by modifications of pitch, quality, strength and
duration affecting mainly stress and intonational patterns.
PUNISHER (Negative Consequence)
A stimulus or
event which decreases the probability of the behavior it follows
REFLEX
Involuntary response to a stimulus, such
as pulling your hand away from hot stove
RANCHOS LOS AMIGOS RATING SCALE
A 10-level
scale of cognitive recovery used for assessing recovery, communicating between
health care professionals and facilities and in research. As a patient's
recovery progresses, he or she will move up the scale.
REHABILITATION
The process of restoring to
useful life a person who has a disabling condition
REINFORCER (Positive Consequences)
A stimulus
or event which increases the probability of the behavior it follows
RESPONDENT
An instance of behavior or single
action caused mainly by the
antecedent presented, not the behavior's
past consequence (e.g., jerking away & yelling OUCH after touching a hot
pan) (See
Operant .)
RESPONSE
How a person acts; what they say or
do. Responses are reactions to what is happening around you.
RETICULAR FORMATION
A small, thick band of
neurons within the brain stem that controls breathing, blood pressure,
heartbeat, levels of consciousness and other vital functions. The reticular
formation constantly monitors the state of the body through its connections with
sensory and motor tracts.
ROAM ALERT
A system designed to provide
security for patients who have the potential to wander and are confused or
agitated. This system helps prevent elopement, therefore decreasing the
potential for injury to self and others.
SCHEDULE OF REINFORCEMENT
A description of the
relationship between a behavior and
reinforcer , which indicates the
frequency of reinforcement for that behavior
SLEEP RECORD
A record used by the nursing staff
(and reviewed by physicians) to chart the hours a patient is awake/asleep. A
sleep record assesses a patient's sleep pattern to determine if interventions
are needed to restore and promote adequate sleep.
SEIZURES
Convulsions; involuntary muscular
contractions/relaxations. The following are types of seizures:
- Grand Mal
Severe, generalized seizures in which the person usually
loses consciousness
- Petit Mal
Seizures consisting of momentary loss of consciousness
(blank stares, etc.)
- Jacksonian
Convulsions, often restricted to certain groups of
muscles or limited to one side of the body; localized
SEQUELAE
The pathological sequences that follow a
traumatic insult or onset of disease
SHEARING
The type of brain lesion often seen as
a result of an abrupt deceleration in movement, resulting in a continuation of
brain movement within the skull. Shearing lesions are recognized as tears in
nerve fibers, particularly of axons through the white matter.
SOCIAL REINFORCER
A type of secondary
reinforcer , such as praise, smiles, hugs
and laughs, that can only be presented by another person
SOFT PALATE
A small flap of tissue that moves
back and forth, allowing air to come out through the nose or mouth; plays an
important role in speech. Damage to the brain can cause problems that prevent
the soft palate from moving. Difficulties with breathing and speaking are the
result.
SPASTICITY
A condition which
causes spasms or other uncontrolled contractions of the skeletal muscles
SUBDURAL HEMATOMA
Bleeding between the
dura membrane covering the brain and the
arachnoid membrane (the innermost layer)
TARGET BEHAVIOR
The behavior which has been
identified for modification or maintenance
THALAMUS
This tiny organ, a part of the
forebrain, functions as a sensory relay station, taking information from the
senses and routing it to the portions of the brain that need it.
THREE NEURO AXIS MODEL OF BRAIN FUNCTIONING
A
model of brain functioning that suggests that any behavior is the product of
three neuroanatomic axes:
- The Anterior/Posterior Axis, which involves executive and control
(output) processes (anterior), as opposed to the input, or reception/processing
of information (posterior)
- The Lateral Axis, involving the two hemispheric systems and their
contrasting of information-processing styles. Left hemisphere systems are
preferentially involved with the building blocks of language, parts of complex
materials and temporally processed information. Right hemisphere systems are
preferentially involved with spatially represented information, the relationship
between parts and the configurational aspects of complex materials.
- The Cortical/Subcortical Neuro Axis, involving complex feedback
relationships between higher order planning systems (cortical axis) and the
extensive subcortical systems mediating life support, arousal, drive responses
and the regulation and execution of behavior in general.
TIME ESTIMATION SKILLS
See
Time Sense .
TRANSIENT COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT (TCI).
This term refers to episodic seizures. Seizures are not necessarily
"on and then off" events. Children who have epilepsy may have intermittent
VENTRICLES
Open spaces or cavities in the brain
which are filled with the same fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord
WORD-FINDING PROBLEM
Inability to evoke words
corresponding to specific concepts